News, 28 December 2006

A judge
in Kansas has refused to hear criminal charges
against a notorious abortionist. Attorney General Phill Kline, an opponent of
abortion, filed 30 charges against Dr George Tiller, accusing him of performing
15 late term abortions in 2003 on patients aged 10-22 and not properly
reporting details to the state. Sedgwick County Judge Paul W. Clark rejected the
charges on jurisdictional grounds and then also rejected an appeal by Kline to
reinstate the charges. [The
Guardian, 27 December]

An Irish
woman is to take her fight to use her frozen embryos to the Supreme Court. The
woman, who is unnamed, separated from her husband, who then refused his
permission for the woman to use the embryos, which are stored in a fertility
clinic in Dublin. A High Court ruling in November said that the frozen embryos were not
protected under Ireland's constitution protecting unborn
children, because they were not implanted in the womb. The woman's lawyer, Alan
Daverson, said: "My client states that it is never
easy to lose litigation, especially litigation which concerns the fundamental
issues at stake in this case presenting uniquely difficult questions of law,
medicine and science. She is nevertheless determined to appeal so that this
issue may finally be determined in the interests of her family and indeed, in
the wide public interest." [Life Site, 22
December]

An American stem cell scientist who opposes work on embryos
is facing being sacked from his university. Professor James Sherley, who
carries out research with adult stem cells, has been refused tenure at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, despite winning awards for his research
and his teaching. He accused the university of racism and threatened to go on
hunger strike in protest. In a letter to his colleagues he wrote that he was
opposed by professors for whom his research "poses an intellectually disruptive
threat" and said that they "might tolerate and even celebrate such a challenge
from a white faculty member, but never from one who is black." [The
Guardian, 27 December]

Posters are being displayed across the north-western
town of Bootle feature cartoon characters warning of the risks of too much alcohol
- including pregnancy. Dr. Janet Atherton, director of public health with South
Sefton Primary Care Trust, said: "We want young people to think about the
damaging and dangerous effects that too much alcohol can have on their lives.
Not only can it have serious implications on their physical health, it can also
leave them vulnerable to taking risks with their sexual health that could lead
to sexually transmitted infections or pregnancy." [Bootle
Times, 28 December]

An Indian court has given elephants the same
status as humans in a recent ruling. The Rajasthan
High Court gave the owner of an elephant killed in a working accident £6,850,
treating it as a "living creature equivalent to a human being". Saddique Khan,
the owner of the elephant, argued that the elephant should be considered to be
of equal value to a human because she responded to commands, performed tricks
and was the main financial provider for his family. [Life Site, 22
December]